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ID156913
Title ProperWhy “I” became a combatant
Other Title Informationa study of memoirs written by nepali maoist combatants
LanguageENG
AuthorAcharya, Khagendra ;  Muldoon, Orla T
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article analyzes combatants’ accounts of their engagement with the Communist Party of Nepal, Maoist—CPN (M). We use Self-Categorization Theory (SCT) as a framework and thematic analysis as a method to examine how social relationships and contextual factors contributed to political party identification during the ten-year-long Maoist insurgency in Nepal. Based on the study of autobiographical narratives written by Nepali Maoist combatants, we demonstrate that a) key social and political experiences cumulatively evoked feeling positively inclined to partisan attachment; b) CPN (M) party ideology, which was presented as a cure-all to socio-political difficulties, actuated the predisposed people’s partisan alignment; c) families were largely unsupportive of their members’ intention to take part in the war; and when they participated, the family responded with antagonism; and d) party ideologues of the CPN (M), who met the partisan-leaning individuals as close friends, accelerated and sustained their friends’ motivation to become involved in the armed conflict. Together the findings culminate in a view that engagement with CPN (M) during the insurgency occurred despite resistance from family and increased exponentially because of societal and political experiences, the strong appeal of party ideology, and social network dynamics.
`In' analytical NoteTerrorism and Political Violence Vol. 29, No.4-6; Jul-Dec 2017: p.1006-1025
Journal SourceTerrorism and Political Violence Vol: 29 No 4-6
Key WordsNepal ;  Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) ;  Socio-Political Context ;  Armed Conflic


 
 
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